The Mail on Sunday

Thousands more firms to get cash for tests at work – as big guns back MoS

Hancock launches help for smaller firms Boohoo, Dixons and EDF join our crusade Duncan Bannatyne vows to test at gyms

- By Alex Lawson

TENS of thousands more firms will be offered Government funds to pay for rapid Covid tests for staff after Matt Hancock and major employers backed The Mail on Sunday’s campaign.

The Health Secretary t oday announces that he is expanding the Government’s workplace coronaviru­s testing pilot scheme to all companies with more than 50 staff. Until now, only English firms with 250 or more staff qualified for the scheme, meaning just 5,000 firms were eligible for state support.

The huge expansion opens up the scheme to a further 31,000 mediumsize­d companies across England.

Writing for The Mail on Sunday, right, Hancock calls on companies to take up the offer, with NHS Test and Trace set to release marketing materials to local authoritie­s and firms to support the initiative.

It is a major step forward for The Mail on Sunday’s Tests at Work campaign, which was launched last week to help reboot Britain’s economy by getting millions of workers safely back to factories, plants, shops and offices.

We revealed that early results from a Government pilot scheme showed major companies had prevented thousands of sick days and avoided entire factory closures by using regular rapid tests that deliver results in as little as 15 minutes.

Retailers John Lewis, Dixons Carphone and Boohoo, energy giant EDF and steelmaker Tata have thrown their weight behind our crusade to get more companies testing their employees regularly.

The firms said workplace testing was a vital tool in reopening the economy safely while the Government focuses on getting Covid-19 vaccines to the entire population.

Our Tests at Work campaign is also calling on the Government to extend its hugely successful pilot scheme beyond the current March 31 cut-off date and expand it from England to all of the UK.

The pilot scheme, launched late last year, offers financial support and advice for companies in England to help them implement workplace testing for employees without Covid symptoms. Employers have been providing workers without Covid symptoms regular so-called ‘lateral flow’ tests that produce a result in 15 minutes to an hour.

Staff are asked to wait for the results in isolated areas before being allowed into the workplace if they test negative.

Businesses in the pilot have also allowed staff who have been in contact with a Covid sufferer to keep going into work as long as they test negative for seven days running.

This so-called ‘daily contact testing’ programme helped John Lewis and Tata save 8,000 potential sick days between them. It also avoided

‘Thousands of sick days and shutdowns averted’

five potential factory shut-downs. Our campaign to roll out rapid workplace testing has won widespread praise over the past seven days as Ministers and businesses plot a route out of lockdown.

Two of Britain’s best- known entreprene­urs – former Dragons’ Den star Duncan Bannatyne and Pimlico Plumbers boss Charlie Mullins – have given us their full backing. And industry bodies such as the Confederat­ion of British Industry, the British Retail Consortium and the Food and Drink Federation – which together represent hundreds of thousands of firms and millions of staff – are on board.

Other supporters joining our call for widespread workplace testing include the FTSE 100-listed packaging giant Smurfit Kappa, Abel & Cole owner William Jackson Food Group and telecoms specialist

Odyssey Systems. Online fashion retailer Boohoo – which last month bought the Debenhams brand and is in talks to snap up Dorothy Perkins, Wallis and Burton – said it had avoided at least 750 sick days since the Army trained staff at its distributi­on centre in Burnley, Lancashire, to test its 500 employees in

October. David James, supply chain director at Boohoo, said: ‘We would encourage other employers to get behind this important campaign and start offering people tests in the workplace.

‘For larger employers, it is a big logistical exercise but it will help to protect colleagues, their families

and the wider community.’ Energy provider EDF is carrying out 1,000 tests a week at its constructi­on site for the Hinkley Point C nuclear power station in Somerset.

EDF has developed its own track and trace system with local health authoritie­s, and has invested in two mobile laboratori­es capable of processing 700 tests a day. David Brown, principal medical officer at EDF, said: ‘ Implementi­ng workplace testing helps us to safely continue our critical role of supplying power to customers at home, in businesses and in the NHS.’

Dixons Carphone said it was rolling out rapid lateral flow testing at its sites in high-risk areas. It began at distributi­on centres in Kent and Nottingham­shire, and will extend the scheme to sites in Liverpool, Southend-on-Sea, in Essex, and Stevenage, in Hertfordsh­ire. Lindsay Haselhurst, chief supply chain officer at Dixons Carphone, which owns Currys PC World, said: ‘It’s early days but workplace testing can play a critical role in our fight against this virus. It gives us the means, for the first time, to identify asymptomat­ic colleagues before they pass it on unknowingl­y.’

Nicholas Oughtred, chairman of William Jackson Food Group, which owns the vegetable box delivery firm Abel & Cole as well as the restaurant supplier Wellocks, said: ‘We support The Mail on Sunday in encouragin­g more businesses to proactivel­y test their colleagues.

‘We’ve been carrying out weekly testing since October and know first- hand how effective it is at helping people feel safer about coming to work. We’ve carried out about 5,000 tests and identified about 100 people who unknowingl­y had the virus.’

Charlie Mullins, the founder and chairman of Pimlico Plumbers, said: ‘Covid testing is a complete no- brainer and something al l responsibl­e companies should be doing while the Government gets on with the critical business of vaccinatin­g the entire UK population.

‘The Mail on Sunday’s campaign hits the nail on the head and is simple common sense.

‘ Testing offers peace of mind, reduction in business downtime and ultimately boosts the safety of workers and the public.’

Duncan Bannatyne, chairman of the Bannatyne Group, vowed to use testing for members of his chain of health clubs when they reopen.

He said: ‘Well done to The Mail on Sunday for this important campaign. Workplace rapid testing can play a significan­t role in reopening businesses and the economy. If the Government provides the tests, I will test all my staff, and members, when they enter the health clubs.’

He added: ‘The fitness sector has a major role to play in the physical and mental health of the country

‘It boosts the safety of workers and the public’

and it’s important we are allowed to open sooner rather than later. Testing will add to the already robust procedures the industry has in place to ensure everyone’s safety.’

British Retail Consortium chief executive Helen Dickinson said: ‘The BRC is supporting retailers who are implementi­ng workplace testing, and the Government should play its part to support and finance the long-term, widespread roll-out of such schemes, particular­ly by extending their own pilot support scheme beyond March 31.’

Andrew Murphy, executive director for operations at the John Lewis Partnershi­p, said: ‘We’re pleased to support The Mail on Sunday’s Tests at Work campaign, which will get the economy moving while helping to keep workers safe.’

Food and Drink Federation chief executive Ian Wright said: ‘Food and drink workers are hidden heroes of the Covid crisis. They have worked throughout the pandemic to keep the nation fed. Their safety is of utmost importance.’

A survey of 1,150 managers by the Chartered Management Institute (CMI) found that 89 per cent of them agreed with The Mail on Sunday that Government testing support needs to cover all of the UK.

Some 83 per cent of managers said that the Government should extend the March 31 deadline, and 88 per cent said that more firms should launch rapid Covid testing in the workplace.

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 ??  ?? BACKING: Supporters of The Mail on Sunday’s testing at work campaign include (clockwise from top right) Dixons Carphone, John Lewis, Boohoo, EDF and (centre) Waitrose
BACKING: Supporters of The Mail on Sunday’s testing at work campaign include (clockwise from top right) Dixons Carphone, John Lewis, Boohoo, EDF and (centre) Waitrose

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